Pubdate: Fri, 7 May 2004 Source: San Jose Mercury News (CA) Copyright: 2004 San Jose Mercury News Contact: http://www.bayarea.com/mld/mercurynews Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/390 Author: Frank Davies, Knight Ridder Newspapers NINE SUSPECTED COLOMBIAN DRUG CARTEL LEADERS INDICTED WASHINGTON - Attorney General John Ashcroft announced Thursday the indictment of nine people believed to be the top leaders of Colombia's largest drug cartel allegedly responsible for smuggling half of all the cocaine that enters the United States in recent years. The racketeering and smuggling charges against the alleged leaders of the so-called Norte de Valle cartel, coupled with a U.S.-Colombian manhunt for them, will cripple the cartel's drug-smuggling activities, Ashcroft and drug enforcement officials said. "We are disabling the single largest source of cocaine to the United States," Ashcroft said after the indictment was unsealed in Washington. He conceded, however, that some of the ringleaders "will be difficult to apprehend." Only one of the nine indicted is in custody. According to the indictment, the Colombian cartel has exported more than 1.2 million pounds of cocaine since 1990, mainly from Colombia's Pacific coast through Mexico into the United States. The cocaine was worth about $10 billion, "roughly equivalent to the combined budgets of the FBI, Drug Enforcement Administration and Bureau of Prisons," said Karen Tandy, head of the DEA. A key target of the U.S.-Colombian manhunt is Diego Leon Montoya Sanchez, alias "Don Diego." He's on the FBI's 10 most wanted list with a reward of up to $5 million for his capture. Last month, Colombian police raided Montoya's ranches and homes and seized an estimated $76.3 million in property. Since the 1990s, when Colombia's Cali and Medellin cartels were broken up, the Norte de Valle cartel has used brutality, bribery and an alliance with a violent Colombian paramilitary group to consolidate its power, the indictment says. The paramilitary group, called Autodefensas Unidas de Colombia, protected the cartel's drug routes from western Colombia, according to the indictment. Separately, Norte de Valle leaders tried to bribe legislators to block the extradition of drug suspects to the United States and wiretapped U.S. and Colombian law enforcement and rival cartels, according to the indictment. The State Department is offering rewards of up to $5 million for each of the nine alleged cartel leaders, said Assistant Secretary Bobby Charles. Combined with the threat of death or extradition, the rewards should disrupt the organization, several officials said. Charles said the indictments would also help Colombia's pro-Washington president, Alvaro Uribe, in his efforts to disband paramilitary groups. "Today we have ripped out the foundation of the largest and most powerful drug cartel in Colombia," said Tandy. "Like the Medellin and Cali cartels before them, their time has run out." So far, Colombian law enforcement efforts have confiscated $200 million of cartel property, and that has "really impaired them financially," Tandy said. Indicted with Montoya were Wilber or Wilbur Varela, Luis Hernando Gomez-Bustamante, Arcangel Henao-Montoya, Juan Carlos Ramirez-Abadia and Carlos Alberto Renteria-Mantilla. Henao-Montoya was captured in Panama in January. Also indicted were Jorge Orlando Rodriguez-Acero, a former Colombian National Police lieutenant; Gabriel Puerta-Parra, an attorney; and Jairo Aparacio-Lenis, who's accused of money laundering. The case against the alleged cartel leaders developed from a money-laundering investigation in New York and Miami. After a 1997 raid of wire-transfer storefronts in Queens, N.Y., FBI, customs and IRS agents began to track huge sums of money sent to Colombia. The massive money transfer "ranged from the unsophisticated - money stuffed into duffel bags - to more elaborate mechanisms, including the black market peso exchange," said IRS Commissioner Mark Everson. Charles said that last year Colombia extradited 67 nationals who face drug charges, and that putting Montoya on the FBI most wanted list will turn up the pressure on the cartel. Joseph Lewis, acting assistant director of the FBI, said that 448 of the 478 most wanted fugitives have been captured over the years. Listing Montoya "will make it very difficult for him to travel," Lewis said. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin